Question:
"what is the four bar mechanism and where it is applied"?
amrita_dinakar
2006-06-21 23:43:29 UTC
"what is the four bar mechanism and where it is applied"?
Three answers:
stumpy
2006-06-22 00:06:13 UTC
The four bar linkage is the simplest case of a linkage, a device that functions to produce rotating, oscillating, or reciprocating motion from the rotation of a crank or vice versa.



An example of the kind of action that can be obtained is an oscillating windshield wiper from the rotation of its motor shaft. The reference gives more details and examples.
suresh kumar
2006-06-22 10:07:07 UTC
four bar linkage or simply a 4-bar or four-bar is the simplest movable linkage. It consists of 4 rigid bodies (called bars or links), each attached to two others by single joints or pivots to form a closed loop.



4-bars are simple mechanisms common in mechanical engineering machine design and fall under the study of kinematics.



If each joint has one rotational degree of freedom (i.e., it is a pivot), then the mechanism is usually planar, and the 4-bar is determinate if the positions of any two bodies are known (although there may be two solutions). One body typically does not move (called the ground link, fixed link, or the frame), so the position of only one other body is needed to find all positions. the two links connected to the ground link are called grounded links. The remaining link, not directly connected to the ground link, is called the coupler link. In terms of mechanical action, one of the grounded links is selected to be the input link, i.e., the link to which an external force is applied to rotate it. The second grounded link is called the follower link, since its motion is completely determined by the motion of the input link.



Planar 4-bar linkages perform a wide variety of motions with a few simple parts. They were also popular in the past due to the ease of calculations, prior to computers, compared to more complicated mechanisms.



Grashof's law is applied to pinned linkages and states; The sum of the shortest and longest link of a planar four bar linkage cannot be greater than the sum of remaining two linkages if there is to be continuous relative motion between the links. Below are the possible types of pinned, four-bar linkages;

Types of four bar linkages, s = shortest link, l = longest link. The majority of four-link mechanisms fall into one of the following two classes:



1. the four-bar linkage mechanism, and

2. the slider-crank mechanism.





examples:

1. slider crank

2. crank piston

3. block feeder

4.The pantograph (Greek: "all-writer") is a four-bar mechanism used to enlarge or reduce drawings. Its basis is a parallelogram of four links with joints ABCD.

5.The current collector of an electric locomotive is called a pantograph, from its construction of slender links that move like a pantograph, although it is not a pantograph at all, but an example of lazy tongs.

6.shapers
I am rock
2006-06-22 12:01:48 UTC
Four bar mechanism is a type of kinematic chain which has four links, four turnning pairs and one fixed link. When motion given to one of the link then the other links moves with respect to the driving link. It is used in railway to transmit power.


This content was originally posted on Y! Answers, a Q&A website that shut down in 2021.
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